1st Edition

Revival: The Frustration of Science (1935)

    148 Pages
    by Routledge

    144 Pages
    by Routledge

    From the beginning to the end of these pages, whether we read of the wilful destruction of the products and productivity of the soil, the aerial destruction of wealth by the thousand million pounds’ worth, created by somebody’s labour, the embarrassing fecundity of modern technology resulting only in every conceivable form of sabotage, the anomalous position of the conscientious medical practitioner. The refusal of women to bring children into such a world, the development of the art of spreading bacterial infection as a new war technique, or the frank abandonment by modern political movements of the hope of social progress that science renders possible – from the beginning to the end of these pages the reader will find elegant examples of the sort of ruling mentality now dominating the world.

    Bitter, and justifiably so, as many of the critics of science are, surely nothing bitterer could be said of it than this, that its abundance has but enthroned the wastrel. Not is the solution exactly what one of the contributors rather naively suggests, that science should look for a new master.

    Foreward 1. Science and Agriculture 2. Aviation 3. Science and Industry 4. Medicine 5. The Invention of Sterility 6. Bacterial Warfare 7. The Frustration of Science

    Biography

    Alfred Daniel Hall